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About The Book
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The church needs effective leaders. We must be more missional. Better organization is required. Such sentiments are commonplace among Christians concerned with the health and sustainability of their local church as well as the church universal. Over the past thirty years the desire for more efficiently run effectively led and organizationally sound churches has contributed to an approach to thinking about the church in terms uncritically assumed from the business and management sector. This has given rise to treating the church as if it were just another social body in need of better organization. The question is what happens when we apply the logic of management techniques to an organization that identifies as the body of Christ? Drawing on organizational theory theological anthropology and sacramental theology this book navigates a path for Christians that avoids reducing the church to just another organization while providing a vision for the church as the social body where all are invited to connect and be made members of Christ and each other. Such a vision provides an alternative to the social categorization that would define the church by its organizational character rather than its eschatological destiny. Lyndon Shakespeare brings remarkable erudition to his argument for the recovery of the body of Christ as an ecclesial designation. As part of that argument he makes clear that we must recover an understanding of the body that challenges the managerial body that so dominates contemporary literature. --Stanley Hauerwas Gilbert T. Rowe Professor Emeritus of Divinity and Law Duke University Being the Body of Christ in the Age of Management isnt just a critique of how the church thinks when it loses confidence in theology nor is it only an excavation of the philosophy behind managerialism. Its a joyful meditation on the church as the body of Christ with a life thats received from animated by and ordered towards God. The detailed analysis is meticulous and the large-scale message could not be more timely. --Andrew Davison Starbridge Lecturer in Theology and Natural Sciences University of Cambridge To govern the Church by neoliberal criteria of supposed efficiency is surely a mode of corpolatry that substitutes the body of an idol for the body of Christ just as idolatry substitutes the face of an idol for the face of God in Christ. This new book makes such a case in a very powerful manner while also explaining why the grasp of secular organization theory by current church leaders is rather poor in any case. Shakespeare issues in effect a clarion call to all seriously able and visionary clergy and theologians to now find ways to seize the initiative from the semi-talented and conformist liberal careerists who are so sadly to the fore in the churches obscuring the real Christian cultural and intellectual revival that is underway in Europe and the Americas. --John Milbank Research Professor of Religion Ethics and Politics at the University of Nottingham England Lyndon Shakespeares book is a timely and intriguing response to the crisis of confidence in practical theology. Rooted in a thorough awareness of the latest management fads the demands of pastoral ministry and a wise application of the traditions of Christian theology Shakespeare is able to navigate a way forward that reflects both reality and a prophetic challenge to the nostrums of our day. Highly recommended. --Justin Lewis-Anthony Associate Dean of Students and Director of Anglican Studies at Virginia Theological Seminary This book is a gift. It is a gift for people who sing in churches people who write about churches people who stand up and speak about the Bible in churches and anyone who loves someone who loves a church. Lyndon Shakespeare has engaged the various schemes for saving mainline-Christianity with patient lucidity. The book takes seriously ideas that have saturated my o